RUSSELL’S MANY POINTS

Thomas Mormann

Abstract


Bertrand Russell was one of the protagonists of the programme of reducing “disagreeable” concepts to philosophically more respectable ones. Throughout his life he was engaged in eliminating or paraphrasing away a copious variety of allegedly dubious concepts: propositions, definite descriptions, knowing subjects, and points, among others. The critical aim of this paper is to show that Russell’s construction of points, which has been considered as a paradigm of a logical construction überhaupt, fails for principal mathematical reasons. The constructive aim of this paper is to show that one can save Russell’s programme by using the conceptual resources of modern pointless topology.

Keywords


20th century philosophy; philosophy; Wittgenstein Ludwig; Boolean algebra; continuous Heyting algebra; Russell Bertrand; Stone Marshall; Whitehead Alfred North; theorem of Balcar-Franek; topology

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